“When we first launched Windows 10 on ARM in late 2017, the long tail of apps customers needed were dominated by 32-bit-only x86 applications, so we focused our efforts on building an x86 emulator that could run the broad ecosystem of Windows apps seamlessly and transparently,” Hari Pulapaka, Microsoft partner group program manager, wrote in a blog post. With the emulator, those Arm notebooks will, eventually and theoretically, run every Windows app that they’d been unable to before, including popular games. Most computers run 64-bit versions of popular apps, simply because it can address four times the memory of an older 32-bit app. The release of the emulator theoretically eliminates one of the challenges Arm laptops have faced: compatibility. The company has released a beta emulator that allows laptops like its Surface Pro X to run 64-bit X86 apps, though at reduced performance. Microsoft is finally bringing Windows on ARM closer to parity with traditional X86 processors.
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